| Old Georgian | |
|---|---|
| ენაჲ ქართული | |
| Spoken in | Ancient Georgia |
| Era | 5th–17th c. |
| Language family |
South Caucasian
|
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | oge |
| Part of a series on |
| Georgians ქართველები |
|---|
The
Kartvelian people |
| Nation |
| Georgia |
| Ancient Georgians |
| Iberians · Colchians |
| Subgroups |
| Zans · Svans |
| Culture |
| Georgian music Georgian media Georgian sport Georgian cinema Georgian cuisine Georgian dances Georgian costume Georgian calendar Georgian surnames Georgian mythology Georgian architecture |
| Language |
| Georgian language Georgian dialects Georgian grammar |
| Alphabet |
| Georgian alphabet Georgian calligraphy |
| Religion |
| Georgian Orthodoxy Adopted in 319 AD |
| Symbols |
| Borjgali Saint Nino Saint Mary Saint George Cross of Bolnisi Cross of Saint Nino Cross of Saint George |
| History |
| History of Georgia |
Old Georgian (ენაჲ ქართული, enay kartuli, meaning the language of the Karts) was the language of the ancient kingdom of Georgia in the Caucasus.
Old Georgian was the literary language for all ethnographic groups of Georgian people beginning in the 5th Century BC, until the modern Georgian language arose in the 17th Century.
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